In silence and tears.
When he had time to think, Colonel
Kelmscott determined in his own mind that he would
still do his best to save Granville, whether Granville
himself wished it or otherwise. So he proceeded
to take all the necessary steps for breaking the entail
and raising the money he needed for Guy and Cyril.
In all this, Granville neither acquiesced
nor dissented. He signed mechanically whatever
documents his father presented to him, and he stood
by his bargain with a certain sullen, undeviating,
hard-featured loyalty; but he never forgot those few
angry words in which his father had half let out his
long-guarded life secret.
Thinking the matter over continually
with himself, however, he came in the end to the natural
conclusion that one explanation alone would fit all
the facts. He was not his father’s eldest
son at all. Colonel Kelmscott must have been
married to some one else before his marriage with
Lady Emily. That some one else’s son was
the real heir of Tilgate. And it was to him that
his father, in his passionate penitence, proposed,
after many years, to do one-sided justice. Now
Granville Kelmscott, though a haughty and somewhat
head-strong fellow, after the fashion of his race,
was a young man of principle and of honour. The
moment this hideous doubt occurred to his mind, he
couldn’t rest in his bed till he had cleared
it all up and settled it for ever, one way or the
other. If Tilgate wasn’t his, by law and
right, he wanted none of it. If his father was
trying to buy off the real heir to the estate with
a pitiful pittance, in order to preserve the ill-gotten
remainder for Lady Emily’s son, why, Granville
for his part would be no active party to such a miserable
compromise. If some other man was the Colonel’s
lawful heir, let that other man take the property and
enjoy it; but he, Granville Kelmscott, would go forth
upon the world, an honest adventurer, to seek his
fortune with his own right hand wherever he might
find it.
Still, he could take no active step,
on the other hand, to hunt up the truth about the
Colonel’s real or supposed first marriage.
For here an awful dilemma blocked the way before him.
If the Colonel had married before, and if by that
former marriage he had a son or sons—how
could Granville be sure the supposed first wife was
dead before the second was married? And supposing,
for a moment, she was not dead—supposing
his father had been even more criminal and more unjust
than he at first imagined—how could he take
the initiative himself in showing that his own mother,
Lady Emily Kelmscott, was no wife at all in the sight
of the law? that some other woman was his father’s
lawful consort? The bare possibility of such an
issue was too horrible for any son on earth to face
undismayed. So, tortured and distracted by his
divided duty, Granville Kelmscott shrank alike from
action or inaction.
In the midst of such doubts and difficulties,
however, one duty shone out clear as day before him.
Till the mystery was cleared up, till the problem
was solved, he must see no more of Gwendoline Gildersleeve.
He had engaged himself to her as the heir of Tilgate.
She had accepted him under that guise, and looked forward
to an early and happy marriage. Now, all was
changed. He was, or might be, a beggar and an
outcast. To be sure, he knew Gwendoline loved
him for himself; but how could he marry her if he didn’t
even know he had anything of his own in the world
to marry upon? The park and fallow deer had been
a part of himself; without them, he felt he was hardly
even a Kelmscott. It was his plain duty, now,
for Gwendoline’s sake, to release her from her
promise to a man who might perhaps be penniless, and
who couldn’t even feel sure he was the lawful
son of his own father. And yet—for
Lady Emily’s sake—he mustn’t
hint, even to Gwendoline, the real reason which moved
him to offer her this release. He must throw
himself upon her mercy, without cause assigned, and
ask her for the time being to have faith in him and
to believe him.
So, a day or two after the interview
with his father in the library, the self-disinherited
heir of Tilgate took the path through the glade that
led into the dell beyond the boundary fence—that
dell which had once been accounted a component part
of Tilgate Park, but which Gilbert Gildersleeve had
proved, in his cold-blooded documentary legal way,
to belong in reality to the grounds of Woodlands.
It was in the dell that Granville sometimes ran up
against Gwendoline. He sat down on the broken
ledge of ironstone that overhung the little brook.
It was eleven o’clock gone. By eleven o’clock,
three mornings in the week, chance—pure
chance—the patron god of lovers, brought
Gwendoline into the dell to meet him.
Presently, a light footfall rang soft
upon the path, and next moment a tall and beautiful
girl, with a wealth of auburn hair, and a bright colour
in her cheeks, tripped lightly down the slope, as
if strolling through the wood in maiden meditation,
fancy free, unexpecting any one.
“What, you here, Mr. Kelmscott?”
she exclaimed, as she saw him, her pink cheek deepening
as she spoke to a still profounder crimson.
“Yes, I’m here, Gwendoline,”
Granville Kelmscott answered, with a smile of recognition
at her maidenly pretence of an undesigned coincidence.
“And I’m here, to say the truth, because
I quite expected this morning to meet you.”
He took her hand gravely. Gwendoline
let her eyes fall modestly on the ground, as if some
warmer greeting were more often bestowed between them.
The young man blushed with a certain manly shame.
“No, not to-day, dear,” he said, with an
effort, as she held her cheek aside, half courting
and half deprecating the expected kiss. “Oh,
Gwendoline, I don’t know how to begin. I
don’t know how to say it. But I’ve
got very sad news for you—news that I can’t
bear to break—that I can’t venture
to explain—that I don’t even properly
understand myself. I must throw myself upon your
faith. I must just ask you to trust me.”
Gwendoline let him seat her, unresisting,
upon the ledge by his side, and her cheek grew suddenly
ashy pale, as she answered with a gasp, forgetting
the “Mr. Kelmscott” at this sudden leap
into the stern realities of life, “Why, Granville,
what do you mean? You know I can trust you.
You know, whatever it may be, I believe you implicitly.”
The young man took her hand in his
with a tender pressure. It was a terrible message
to have to deliver. He bungled and blundered
on, with many twists and turns, through some inarticulate
attempt at an indefinite explanation. It wasn’t
that he didn’t love her—oh, devotedly,
eternally, she must know that well; she never could
doubt it. It wasn’t that any shadow had
arisen between him and her, it wasn’t anything
he could speak about, or anything she must say to
any soul on earth—oh, for his mother’s
sake, he hoped and trusted she would religiously keep
his secret inviolate! But something had happened
to him within the last few days—something
unspeakable, indefinite, uncertain, vague, yet very
full of the most dreadful possibilities; something
that might make him unable to support a wife; something
that at least must delay or postpone for an unknown
time the long-hoped-for prospect of his claiming her
and marrying her. Some day, perhaps—he
broke off suddenly, and looked with a wistful look
into her deep grey eyes. His resolution failed
him. “One kiss,” he said, “Gwendoline!”
His voice was choking. The beautiful girl, turning
towards him with a wild sob, fell, yielding herself
on his breast, and cried hot tears of joy at that evident
sign that, in spite of all he said, he still really
loved her.
They sat there long, hand in hand,
and eye on eye, talking it all over, as lovers will,
with infinite delays, yet getting no nearer towards
a solution either way. Gwendoline, for her part,
didn’t care, of course—what true
woman does?—whether Granville was the heir
of Tilgate or not; she would marry him all the more,
she said, if he were a penniless nobody. All
she wanted was to love him and be near him. Let
him marry her now, marry her to-day, and then go where
he would in the world to seek his livelihood.
But Granville, poor fellow, alarmed at the bare suggestion—for
his mother’s sake—that Tilgate might
really not be his, checked her at once in her outburst
with a grave, silent look; he was still, he said calmly,
the inheritor of Tilgate. It wasn’t that.
At least, not as she took it. He didn’t
know precisely what it was himself. She must
have faith in him and trust him. She must wait
and see. In the end, he hoped, he would come
back and marry her.
And Gwendoline made answer, with many
tears, that she knew it was so, and that she loved
him and trusted him. So, after sitting there
long, hand locked in hand, and heart intent on heart,
the two young people rose at last to go, protesting
and vowing their mutual love on either side, as happy
and as miserable in their divided lives as two young
people in all England that moment. Over and over
again they kissed and said good-bye; then they stood
with one another’s fingers clasped hard in their
own, unwilling to part, and unable to loose them.
After that, they kissed again, and declared once more
they were broken-hearted, and could never leave one
another. But still, Granville added, half aside,
he must make up his mind not to see Gwendoline again—honour
demanded that sacrifice—till he could come
at last a rich man to claim her. Meanwhile, she
was free; and he—he was ever hers, devotedly,
whole-souledly. But they were no longer engaged.
He was hers in heart only. Let her try to forget
him. He could never forget her.
And Gwendoline, sobbing and tearful,
but believing him implicitly, retreated with slow
steps, looking back at each turn of the zigzag path,
and sending the ghosts of dead kisses from her finger-tips
to greet him.
Below in the dell Granville stood
still, and watched her depart in breathless silence.
Then, in an agony of despair, he flung himself down
on the ground and burst into tears, and sobbed like
a child over his broken daydream.
Gwendoline, coming back to make sure,
saw him lying and sobbing so; and, woman-like, felt
compelled to step down just one minute to comfort
him. Granville in turn refused her proffered comfort—it
was better so—he mustn’t listen to
her any more; he must steel himself to say No; he
must remember it was dishonourable of him to drag
a delicately nurtured girl into a penniless marriage.
Then they kissed once more and made it all up again;
and they sobbed and wept as before, and broke it off
for ever; and they said good-bye for the very last
time; and they decided they must never meet till Granville
came back; and they hoped they would sometimes catch
just a glimpse of one another in the outer world, and
whatever the other one said or did, they would each
in their hearts be always true to their first great
love; and they were more miserable still, and they
were happier than they had ever been in their lives
before; and they parted at last, with a desperate
effort, each perfectly sure of the other’s love,
and each vowing in soul they would never, never see
one another again, but each, for all that, perfectly
certain that some day or other they would be husband
and wife, though Tilgate and the wretched little fallow
deer should sink, unwept, to the bottom of the ocean.